The most Popular Posts of the past seven days.

Dec 9, 2025

Thank you Martin!

 



CAPRI NEWSLETTER - December 2025

 

 

That's it. We're finished showing movies for the year. There are a few private rentals to take care of, and then it is time for me to say goodbye.


Ideally this would be a letter thanking people by name for all they've done for me, and for the Capri Theatre, for the last 40 years. Fortunately, there are too many people to thank. I know I would overlook too many, and anyway, it would end up reading like the acknowledgments chapter of a too long book.


Instead, I wish a collective "Thank You" to everyone who has supported me in one way or another. 


Certainly the friends I have made. Those I still have, and those I miss.


The people who took a chance and hired me in 1985 - the ones who thought it was a good idea, and those who didn't at first, but later came around.


Thanks to the Board Members, especially the Board Presidents, who put up with me over the years. Who contributed a portion of your life to steering the Capri. Through police raids, controversial films, collapsed ceilings, and every calamity, big or small, we thought may close the Capri. And always scraping together the money. Money to pay the bills, buy the building, convert to digital, put up a new marquee, and everything it takes to run a single screen theatre in Montgomery.


And, of course thanks to all of the people who make the Capri possible. Your support - through memberships, donations, attendance, time, and work - is the real reason the Capri still exists. No matter what, you have never let us down.


That includes those who have volunteered your time and work to the Capri. Some of you have volunteered for decades, and most likely will outlast my record at the Capri.


And to our many past - and current few - employees, most of whom have been at the theatre for at least a decade. Your work, loyalty, and dedication are appreciated.


It's beginning to read like the acknowledgments chapter I wanted to avoid. It's time for me to go. I've done what I could at the Capri, though not everything I wanted. I think it will be in good hands. They will be facing some challenges I'm glad I won't, so please show them the support you've shown me.


I'll still be around. I'll just be an old guy telling stories. So many of which will be about the Capri. Thanks for letting me have them.


Happy Holidays


Martin McCaffery

Director

Capri Theatre

(11/25/1985 - 12/31/2025)

Dec 8, 2025

Tuberville's Muslim Message

 

“Muslim communities are moving everywhere,” Tuberville told Infowars podcast host Breanna Morello the day after Hoover’s hearing.

“In every state, they’re building Mosques, they’re having these five prayers a day, they’re pushing this cult on everybody across this country.”

Tuberville said the school is a tool used to influence young people and convert them to Islam.

 

OH SURE.....A PUSH towards ISLAM is underway in ALABAMA????? REALLY?????Are you kidding me? They're going to turn ALABAMA Ismamic??????? This is a FAKE FEAR EVENT by Tuberville. I Say B.S.

 Islam Images – Browse 2,483,750 Stock Photos, Vectors, and ...

"Piggy" Quote

 (SOURCE: AL.COM: story: https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/6871772578731471687/3468777938395548379)

“I think when you come in and when you’re [coverage is] 97% negative to Trump and then Trump wins the election in a landslide, that means obviously your news is not credible,” Trump said. “And you’re not credible as a reporter.”

Trump’s outburst came a day after he lashed out at CBS News’ Jennifer Jacobs when she asked whether there was any incrimination information against Trump in the Epstein files.

“Quiet, quiet piggy,” Trump told Jacobs after she asked the question on Air Force One.

Tuberville & Islam

 “In the future, in a year, I’ll be the governor,” he said, “and I’ll be damned if we’re going to do that in the state of Alabama. We’re going to protect the people of Alabama; we’re going to protect our constitution. We’re going to protect our state and we’re going to protect our country.”

Source: HERE 

Birth of Movies!

 May be an image of ‎text that says '‎FiRst NICKELODEON NICKEL MOVIE THEATER الز ur In 1905, two men opened the first commercia movie theater in Pittsburgh for just a nickel. This single storefront sparked a revolution, leading to 9,000 'Nickelodeons' and creating America's movie-going culture.‎'‎

Dec 6, 2025

An Award for tRump

 From AL.COM:

Critics of President Donald Trump reacted with a collective eye roll after he was bestowed Friday with the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize for his “unwavering commitment to advancing peace and unity throughout the world.”

Trump, who had sought the Nobel Peace Prize but was left empty handed by the Nobel Committee, was recognized Friday by FIFA, the governing body of international soccer, during the draw for the 2026 World Cup at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

 I  have promised myself NOT to buy anything that uses the words "THIS STORY continues in the comments."

Montgomery Historic School Fire

 

"This morning, our city suffered a heartbreaking loss," Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed said in a statement issued Friday afternoon. "The fire that engulfed the historic Sayre Street School has left us deeply disheartened. While we are grateful that no injuries have been reported, the damage to this treasured landmark is a profound blow to Montgomery’s cultural and educational legacy."

Reed's statement said the structure was the city's oldest surviving public school building

Montgomery Fire Department firefighters extinguish a fire at the former Sayre Street School building in Montgomery, Ala. on Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. (From the Montgomery Advertiser)

Dec 4, 2025

Happy 193rd Birthday!

 Jonathan, world's oldest tortoise, on the lawn in front of the Governor's residence on the island of Saint Helena.

Living through just one US president might feel like it lasts forever – but imagine living through 40 of them. That’s an unlikely feat for us humans unless we somehow figure out how to live longer (or if we ended up with a string of presidents serving short terms), but it’s a reality for Jonathan the tortoise, the world’s oldest living land animal.

No one knows exactly how old this Seychelles giant tortoise (Aldabrachelys gigantea hololissa) is. He arrived fully grown to the South Atlantic island of Saint Helena in 1882, serving as a gift to the British overseas territory’s future governor, William Grey-Wilson. Based on Jonathan’s maturity at that time, it’s estimated he was at least 50 years old – and so, when he was finally given an official birthday in 2022, it was assigned to be December 4, 1832.

That means Jonathan will turn, at the very least, a whopping 193 years old later this year. During that time, the giant tortoise has lived through US presidents from Andrew Jackson all the way to Donald Trump. That’s 40 presidents in total, and a whole lot of political history. 

Not that he’d have paid much attention to US politics, that is. Not just because he lives in St Helena, which isn’t part of the US, but because, well… he’s a tortoise. As far as we’re aware, he’s much more likely to be invested in a leafy green snack (and frankly, who can blame him).

He might not be able to smell or see such delicious goods anymore – he’s pretty much lost his sight due to cataracts and his sense of smell has also gone – but Jonathan’s appetite “remains keen” according to his vet Joe Hollins, speaking to Guinness World Records (GW)in 2023.

Hollins gave an insight into Jonathan’s top snacks during a 2019 interview with GWR. “He loves banana, but it tends to gum up his mouth. Lettuce hearts, though not very nutritious, are a favourite. He also greatly enjoys cabbage, cucumber, apple, other seasonal fruits, carrots – a good source of dietary fibre that he loves.” 

But besides feasting on some tasty meals, what else does a 192-year-old tortoise get up to on a daily basis?It’s a “very relaxed” schedule, apparently. “He enjoys the sun but on very hot days takes to the shade. On mild days, he will sunbathe – his long neck and legs stretched fully out of his shell to absorb heat and transfer it to his core,” said Rollins. “On cold winter days, he will dig himself into leaf mould or grass clippings and remain there all day.”Sounds pretty chilled, although maybe he’s just saving his energy for knockin’ boots with Emma and Fred, two of the other tortoises he lives with. “In spite of his age, Jonathan still has a good libido and is seen frequently to mate with Emma and sometimes Fred,” said Rollins.


 

Dec 2, 2025

Censoring is now OK?

 

"The University of Alabama on Monday announced to staff of student-run publications Alice Magazine and Nineteen Fifty-Six that the magazines would be suspended, effective immediately, in compliance with federal regulations.

In their decision, UA officials cited a memo released by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi this summer claiming that DEI initiatives can be considered discriminatory and may be in violation of federal anti-discrimination laws."

SOURCE: Here 

Nov 30, 2025

NY Times Story

 

Silicon Valley’s Man in the White House Is Benefiting Himself and His Friends

David Sacks, the Trump administration’s A.I. and crypto czar, has helped formulate policies that aid his Silicon Valley friends and many of his own tech investments.

NY Times Story is HERE

Media

 


Comments 15

NEW YORK (AP) — Cat Murphy, a college student, has wanted to be a journalist since she was 11. Many of her friends don’t understand why.

When they engage with the news — if they do — they hear a cacophony of voices. They don’t know who to believe. Reporters are biased. They make mistakes. Besides, why would you hitch your future to a dying industry?

“There is a lot of commentary — ‘Oh, good for you. Look what you’re walking into. You’re going to be screaming into the void. You’re going to be useless,’” said Murphy, a 21-year-old graduate student at the University of Maryland’s journalism school.

She is undeterred. And it’s also why she’s not surprised by the findings of a study this fall that documented negative attitudes toward the news media among 13- to 18-year-old Americans. The press rarely fares well in surveys of adults, but it’s sobering to see the same disdain among people whose opinions about the world are still forming.

Words to describe the news media today

Asked by the News Literacy Project for one word to describe today’s news media, 84% of teens responded with something negative — “biased,” “crazy,” “boring,” “fake, ”bad,” “depressing,” “confusing,” “scary.”

More than half of the teens surveyed believe journalists regularly engage in unethical behaviors like making up details or quotes in stories, paying sources, taking visual images out of context or doing favors for advertisers. Less than a third believe reporters correct their errors, confirm facts before reporting them, gather information from multiple sources or cover stories in the public interest — practices ingrained in the DNA of reputable journalists.

To some degree, teens reflect the attitudes they’re exposed to, particularly when the most prominent politician of their age has made “fake news” a mantra. Experts say few teens follow news regularly or learn in school about the purpose of journalism.

Journalists don’t help themselves with mistakes or ethical lapses that make headlines. Opinionated reporters or commentators in an era of political division make readers wonder what to believe.

“Some of this (attitude) is earned, but much of it is based on misperception,” said Peter Adams, senior vice president of research and design for the Washington-based News Literacy Project.

Never picking up the news habit

There are ways to turn things around, but it will take work.

Many of Lily Ogburn’s classmates get their information from social media. Their parents didn’t watch or read news reports as they grew up, so they didn’t pick up the habit, said Ogburn, a senior at Northwestern University’s journalism school.

Ogburn is the former editor-in-chief at the well-regarded Daily Northwestern student newspaper. The newspaper’s 2023 reports on alleged hazing and racism within the school’s football program led to the ouster of its coach. Still, she found some students don’t understand the newspaper’s role; they believe it exists to protect people in power rather than hold them accountable.

She frequently had to explain what she did to classmates. “There’s a lot of mistrust toward journalists,” she said. But it has firmed her resolve to stick with the profession.

“I want to be a journalist that people trust,” Ogburn said, “and I want to report news that makes people believe and trust in the media.”

The news industry’s financial troubles over the past two decades have hollowed out newsrooms and left fewer journalists on duty. Along with not seeing much legitimate journalism, young people frequently don’t experience it through popular culture — unlike a previous generation, which learned in detail how Washington Post reporters Robert Woodward and Carl Bernstein exposed the Watergate scandal in the Academy Award-winning movie “All the President’s Men.”

When the News Literacy Project asked, two-thirds of teens couldn’t think of anything when asked what movies or TV shows come to mind when they think about journalism. Those who had answers most frequently cited the “Spider-Man” franchise or the movie “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.” Neither portrayal was particularly flattering.

Upon retiring as editor of Newsday, Howard Schneider helped develop the State University of New York system’s first School of Journalism. But instead of teaching future writers, editors or producers, he became drawn to teaching non-journalists about being news consumers.

Now the executive director of SUNY Stony Brook’s Center for News Literacy, Schneider wasn’t surprised about any of the recent survey’s findings, either.

“The negativity, the feeling that news is biased, is just a reflection of how their parents feel,” Schneider said. “The more exposed to news, legitimate news, the more their attitudes turn positive.”

He has developed news literacy programs for school districts. “Students will say, ‘I get my news from YouTube,’” he said. “I say, ‘No, you don’t,’” and explains where the news originates and how to be discerning about what they see.

Lessons from a news literacy class

That’s one of the lessons that 16-year-old Brianne Boyack has taken from her course in news literacy at Brighton High School in Cottonwood Heights, Utah. She had little trust in news going in, but has learned the importance of double-checking sources when she sees something interesting and seeking outlets she’s found reliable.

Her classmate, Rhett MacFarlane, applied what he learned in class to investigate when a friend told him the Louvre was robbed in Paris.

“I’ve learned that there is definitely fact-checking (in journalism),” MacFarlane, also 16, told The Associated Press. “You guys are professionals and you have to tell the truth or you’d be fired. I thought you guys just did whatever you wanted and chose what to say about a topic.”

Still, news literacy programs in schools are relatively rare. Schools already have a lot of subjects to cover to prepare students for the future. And, remember, journalists don’t have the best reputations. It can be hard for educators to stick their necks out for them.

“There’s an inertia here,” Schneider said, “and this is an urgent issue.”

At the University of Maryland, Murphy said she didn’t think there was an inherent hatred toward journalists among her fellow students. “They don’t have any experience reading journalism,” she said.

That’s where she sees the journalism industry needing to make more of an effort. One of the things she finds most frustrating about her chosen field is a resistance to change, particularly an unwillingness or inability to make meaningful use of social media.

“There’s very little movement in the direction of going to where people are, as opposed to expecting them to come to where you are,” Murphy said. “The only way to turn it around is going to be to switch to doing things that captivate people today, as opposed to captivating people 20 years ago.”

___

David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social

Nov 29, 2025

tRump

 

Trump says he's canceling all Biden orders that were signed using an autopen.

Really?

Can we now cancel ALL of the decisions tRump made since he lost his mind? 

All-powerful tRump

  "As president of the United States...Trump has no authority over Venezuelan airspace. But foreign governments and airlines often follow the United States’ lead."

From a NY Times report, in case you were wondering. 

Worst Traffic?

 

What cities have the worst holiday traffic?

With Birmingham facing such heavy holiday traffic, it's worth seeing how it stacks up against other metros nationwide. Here's a look at the cities rounding out the top 10 spots on ConsumerAffairs' list:

  1. Tampa, Florida
  2. Birmingham, Alabama
  3. St. Louis, Missouri
  4. Cleveland, Ohio
  5. Phoenix, Arizona
  6. New Orleans, Louisiana
  7. Atlanta, Georgia
  8. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  9. Nashville, Tennessee
  10. Memphis, Tennessee

Nov 27, 2025

The Law is THE LAW!

Arkadium's Texas Hold'em 

Advertiser Headline:

"Tuscaloosa, Auburn mayors place charity wager on Iron Bowl's outcome"

 SORRY...but as long as Alabama bans lotteries, I support banning ALL gambling, even if the gains go to charities.

You can't have it both ways...either gambling is illegal or not.

Happy Thansksgiving! 

Nov 26, 2025

Poor Trumper.....

 

Trump blasts ‘ugly’ New York Times journalist over report of his ‘signs of fatigue’

I'm snake-phoebic....so this story has me shaking!

Imagine a 49 foot long snake! 

 

 https://dailygalaxy.com/2025/11/scientists-unearth-15-meter-snake-fossil/

Amen, NY Times, AMEN!

 The concluding sentence in a NY Times editorial in today's paper:

 

We ask a lot of those who put their lives on the line defending our nation. The least we can do is respect their free speech rights once they’ve retired. 

full editorial is HERE

Typical name calling

 “This race is already over — but if Comrade Doug wants to get blown out again, be our guest,” Communications director for Tuberville’s campaign Mallory Jaspers wrote. 

 

The Tuberville people seem to be incapable of NOT calling names.....like 4th graders. 

Nov 23, 2025

Rosa's 70th....

 

Free admission to Henry Ford Museum to honor 70th anniversary of Rosa Parks’ disobedience

Detroit Destinations: Henry Ford Museum
The Mongtomery, Alabama city bus on which Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white passenger in 1955 – a pivotal moment in the Civil Rights movement – at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025.Jacob Hamilton | MLive.com

DEARBORN, MI - The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation will waive admission and parking fees on Monday, Dec. 1 to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Rosa Parks’ act of civil disobedience.

On Dec. 1, 1955, Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama bus, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott and becoming a pivotal moment in the American civil rights movement.

Visitors to the Dearborn museum will have the opportunity to see the actual bus where Parks made history. The museum also features exhibits about everyday people who sparked significant social change, according to a museum press release.

The free admission day runs from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the museum located at 20900 Oakwood Blvd. in Dearborn.

Generative AI was used to draft this story, based on information provided by The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation. It was reviewed and edited by MLive staff.

  • Nov 22, 2025

    About Marjorie Taylor Greene

     From The Washington Post:

     Trump cuts ties with Marjorie Taylor Greene : NPR

    "Greene is waiting to formally resign until Jan. 5. That’s two days after she crosses the five-year threshold required to qualify for a lifetime congressional pension, which comes with generous health care benefits. Maybe she’s not so different from the politicians she detests. At least she won’t have to worry about paying higher insurance premiums." 

    Nov 18, 2025

    From AL.COM: The Iron Bowl details

     



    "The Crimson Tide will play the Tigers at 6:30 p.m. CT on Saturday, Nov. 29. The game will be played at Jordan-Hare Stadium. The broadcast will be on ABC.

    This marks the first night Iron Bowl since 2014. It’s also the first night Iron Bowl at Jordan-Hare Stadium since 200

    No. 10 Alabama will first face Eastern Illinois this week. Auburn will play Mercer.

    The Crimson Tide (8-2, 6-1 SEC) enters the Iron Bowl in essentially a must-win scenario. A victory all but clinches a playoff spot. A loss likely keeps Alabama out of the playoff."

    Nov 17, 2025

    South's biggest newspaper ends print

     


    Nov 16, 2025

    "The Atlanta Journal-Constitution will print its final edition on Dec. 31, closing a 157-year chapter even as the newsroom doubles down on a digital future.

    But inside and around the venerable institution, another story is unfolding: a chorus of veterans who built the paper — on copy desks and carrier routes, in pressrooms, bureaus and features sections — pausing to say goodbye to the thud on the lawn, the rumble of the presses, the ink that smudged fingers and white linen blouses."